This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list
implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much
simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require
defining a typedef for every list type.
The downside is that there is only one list type which is a
doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning
and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of
which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical
structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list.
The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are:
• COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty
notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one
pointer.
• COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences.
• COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an
extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of
three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important
struct to optimise for size anyway.
• COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens.
• COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a
CoglMemoryStack.
• COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had
code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a
pipeline.
• COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode.
The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the
size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to
have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to
be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because
CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two
pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two
pointers.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324)
Conflicts:
cogl/cogl-context-private.h
cogl/cogl-context.c
cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c
doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
This adds a new function to enable per-vertex point size on a
pipeline. This can be set with
cogl_pipeline_set_per_vertex_point_size(). Once enabled the point size
can be set either by drawing with an attribute named
'cogl_point_size_in' or by writing to the 'cogl_point_size_out'
builtin from a snippet.
There is a feature flag which must be checked for before using
per-vertex point sizes. This will only be set on GL >= 2.0 or on GLES
2.0. GL will only let you set a per-vertex point size from GLSL by
writing to gl_PointSize. This is only available in GL2 and not in the
older GLSL extensions.
The per-vertex point size has its own pipeline state flag so that it
can be part of the state that affects vertex shader generation.
Having to enable the per vertex point size with a separate function is
a bit awkward. Ideally it would work like the color attribute where
you can just set it for every vertex in your primitive with
cogl_pipeline_set_color or set it per-vertex by just using the
attribute. This is harder to get working with the point size because
we need to generate a different vertex shader depending on what
attributes are bound. I think if we wanted to make this work
transparently we would still want to internally have a pipeline
property describing whether the shader was generated with per-vertex
support so that it would work with the shader cache correctly.
Potentially we could make the per-vertex property internal and
automatically make a weak pipeline whenever the attribute is bound.
However we would then also need to automatically detect when an
application is writing to cogl_point_size_out from a snippet.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 8495d9c1c15ce389885a9356d965eabd97758115)
Conflicts:
cogl/cogl-context.c
cogl/cogl-pipeline-private.h
cogl/cogl-pipeline.c
cogl/cogl-private.h
cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-fixed.c
cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-fixed-arbfp.c
This ensures we only add a static_breadcrumb pointer to every
CoglPipeline when build with debugging enabled. Since applications may
allocate a lot of pipelines we want to keep the basic size of pipelines
(ignoring optional sparse state) down to a minimum.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 4716312e14bc253cd174a22b3db9d2c9cf031fa1)
Since _cogl_pipeline_update_blend_enable() can sometimes show up quite
high in profiles; instead of calling
_cogl_pipeline_update_blend_enable() whenever we change pipeline state
that may affect blending we now just set a dirty flag and when we flush
a pipeline we check this dirty flag and lazily calculate whether blender
really needs to be enabled if it's set.
Since it turns out we were too optimistic in assuming most GL drivers
would recognize blending with ADD(src,0) is equivalent to disabling
GL_BLEND we now check this case ourselves so we can always explicitly
disable GL_BLEND if we know we don't need blending.
This introduces the idea of an 'unknown_color_alpha' boolean to the
pipeline flush code which is set whenever we can't guarantee that the
color attribute is opaque. For example this is set whenever a user
specifies a color attribute with 4 components when drawing a primitive.
This boolean needs to be cached along with every pipeline because
pipeline::real_blend_enabled depends on this and so we need to also call
_cogl_pipeline_update_blend_enable() if the status of this changes.
Incidentally with this patch we now no longer ever use
_cogl_pipeline_set_blend_enable() internally. For now the internal api
hasn't been removed though since we might want to consider re-purposing
it as a public api since it will now not conflict with our own internal
state tracking and could provide a more convenient way to disable
blending than setting a blend string.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit ab2ae18f3207514c91fa6fd9f2d3f2ed93a86497)
When a pipeline is added to the cache, a normal copy would previously be
made to use as the key in the hash table. This copy keeps a reference
to the real pipeline which means all of the resources it contains are
retained forever, even if they aren't necessary to generate the hash.
This patch changes it to create a trimmed down copy that only has the
state necessary to generate the hash. A new function called
_cogl_pipeline_deep_copy is added which makes a new pipeline that is
directly a child of the root pipeline. It then copies over the
pertinent state from the original pipeline. The pipeline state is
copied using the existing _cogl_pipeline_copy_differences function.
There was no equivalent function for the layer state so I have added
one.
That way the pipeline key doesn't have the texture data state and it
doesn't hold a reference to the original pipeline so it should be much
cheaper to keep around.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit e27e01c1215e7e7c7c0183ded11dd769bb112c5c)
Adding a layer difference may mean the pipeline overrides all of the
layers of its parent which might make the parent redundant so we
should try to prune the hierarchy.
This is particularly important for CoglGst because whenever a new
frame is ready it tries to make a copy of the pipeline it last used
and then replace all of the textures in the layers. Without this patch
the new pipeline would keep the parent pipeline alive which means also
keeping the old textures alive so all of the frames of the video would
effectively be leaked.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 576c7b55aa835448c977f1d79d128dffd40e7cd8)
This remove cogl-internal.h in favour of using cogl-private.h. Some
things in cogl-internal.h were moved to driver/gl/cogl-util-gl-private.h
and the _cogl_gl_error_to_string function whose prototype was moved from
cogl-internal.h to cogl-util-gl-private.h has had its implementation
moved from cogl.c to cogl-util-gl.c
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 01cc82ece091aa3bec4c07fdd6bc9e5135fca573)
This adds back compatibility for CoglShaders that reference the
cogl_tex_coord_in[] or cogl_tex_coord_out[] varyings. Unlike the
previous way this was done this patch maintains the use of layer numbers
for attributes and maintains forwards compatibility by letting shaders
alternatively access the per-layer tex_coord varyings via
cogl_tex_coord%i_in/out defines that index into the array.
This removes the need to maintain an array of tex_coord varyings and
instead we now just emit a varying per-layer uniquely named using a
layer_number infix like cogl_tex_coord0_out and cogl_tex_coord0_in.
Notable this patch also had to change the journal flushing code to use
pipeline layer numbers to determine the name of texture coordinate
attributes.
We now also break batches by using a deeper comparison of layers so
such that two pipelines with the same number of layers can now cause a
batch break if they use different layer numbers.
This adds an internal _cogl_pipeline_layer_numbers_equal() function that
takes two pipelines and returns TRUE if they have the same number of
layers and all the layer numbers are the same too, otherwise it returns
FALSE.
Where we used to break batches based on changes to the number of layers
we now break according to the status of
_cogl_pipeline_layer_numbers_equal
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit e55b64a9cdc93285049d9b969bef67484c2d9fb3)
Note: this will cause a temporary regression for the Cogl 1.x CoglShader
api since it will break compatibility with existing shaders that
reference the texture varyings from the fragment shader.
The intention is to follow up with another patch to add back
CoglShader compatibility.
This adds a new CoglDriver for GL 3 called COGL_DRIVER_GL3. When
requested, the GLX, EGL and SDL2 winsyss will set the necessary
attributes to request a forward-compatible core profile 3.1 context.
That means it will have no deprecated features.
To simplify the explosion of checks for specific combinations of
context->driver, many of these conditionals have now been replaced
with private feature flags that are checked instead. The GL and GLES
drivers now initialise these private feature flags depending on which
driver is used.
The fixed function backends now explicitly check whether the fixed
function private feature is available which means the GL3 driver will
fall back to always using the GLSL progend. Since Rob's latest patches
the GLSL progend no longer uses any fixed function API anyway so it
should just work.
The driver is currently lower priority than COGL_DRIVER_GL so it will
not be used unless it is specificly requested. We may want to change
this priority at some point because apparently Mesa can make some
memory savings if a core profile context is used.
In GL 3, getting the combined extensions string with glGetString is
deprecated so this patch changes it to use glGetStringi to build up an
array of extensions instead. _cogl_context_get_gl_extensions now
returns this array instead of trying to return a const string. The
caller is expected to free the array.
Some issues with this patch:
• GL 3 does not support GL_ALPHA format textures. We should probably
make this a feature flag or something. Cogl uses this to render text
which currently just throws a GL error and breaks so it's pretty
important to do something about this before considering the GL3
driver to be stable.
• GL 3 doesn't support client side vertex buffers. This probably
doesn't matter because CoglBuffer won't normally use malloc'd
buffers if VBOs are available, but it might but worth making
malloc'd buffers a private feature and forcing it not to use them.
• GL 3 doesn't support the default vertex array object. This patch
just makes it create and bind a single non-default vertex array
object which gets used just like the normal default object. Ideally
it would be good to use vertex array objects properly and attach
them to a CoglPrimitive to cache the state.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 66c9db993595b3a22e63f4c201ea468bc9b88cb6)
When a layer changes before the pipeline has decided which progend to
use it doesn't need to notify the progend of the change. This was
causing it to crash. This patch makes that change and also simplifies
the notification a bit by just making the calls directly instead of
having three separate functions.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 2006ddd68ea6a5d53b5a810d8dbf39025d9ec04c)
Since we used to support hybrid fixed-function + glsl pipelines when
running with OpenGL there were numerous differences in how we handled
codegen and uniform updates between GLES2 and full OpenGL. Now that we
only support end-to-end glsl pipelines this patch can largely unify how
we handle GLES2 and OpenGL.
Most notably we now never use the builtin attribute names. This should
also make it easy for us to support creating strict OpenGL 3.1 contexts
where the builtin names have been removed.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 2701b93f159bf2d3387cedf2d06fe921ad5641f3)
This adds a new "fixed-arbfp" progend so we now have 3 distinct ways of
setting up the state of a pipeline:
» fixed; where the vertex and fragment processing are implemented
using fixed function opengl apis.
» fixed-arbfp; where vertex processing is implemented using fixed
function opengl apis but fragment processing is implemented
using the ARB Fragment Processing language.
» glsl; there vertex and fragment processing are both implemented
using glsl.
This means we avoid unusual, combinations such as glsl for vertex
processing and arbfp for fragment processing, and also avoid pairing
fixed-function vertex processing with glsl fragment processing which we
happen to know hits some awkward code paths in Mesa that lead to poor
performance.
As part of this change, the progend now implies specific vertend and
fragend choices so instead of associating a vertend and fragend with a
pipeline we now just associate a progend choice.
When flushing a pipeline and choosing what progend to use, we now call a
progend->start() method that is able to determine if the vertend and
fragend together will be able to handle the given pipeline so the
vertend and fragend ->start() methods no longer need to return a boolean
status.
Since we now don't need to support glsl used in conjunction with fixed
function this will allow us to avoid ever using OpenGL builtin attribute
names, though this patch doesn't change that yet.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit cec381f50c7a2f2186bd4a8c5f38fecd5f099075)
This removes an optimization that I added at some point, which I'm
pretty certain I only added on a hunch. Reading the description I'm not
really convinced it makes sense to do this given that the fixed vertend
and fragend are currently listed before the glsl vertend and fragend in
the order that we look for a suitable backend. This means unless the
pipeline depends on glsl (e.g. due to an associated snippet) we would
reselect the fixed backend anyway, and if it really did depend on glsl
then we'd notice when we come to flush and switch backends there any way.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 071698d2c017af33e41b838429d514f5df5e02a1)
When pruning a pipeline to a set number of layers it records the index
of the first layer after the given number of layers have been found.
This is stored in a variable called 'first_index_to_prune' implying
that this layer should be included in the layers to be pruned. However
the subsequent if-statement was only pruning layers with an index
greater than the recorded index so it would presumably only prune the
following layers. This patch fixes it to use '>=' instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683414
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit d3063e8dea92a8f668acef6435cc68e0c901dc8d)
When pruning layers from a pipeline the pipeline cache would once be
freed due to the call to pre_change_notify but it would immediately be
recreated again when foreach_layer_internal is called. When n_layers
is later set to 0 it would end up with an invalid cache lying around.
This patch changes the order so that it will iterate the layers first
before triggering the pre-change notify so that the cache will be
cleared correctly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683414
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 1c8efdc838cc5ace380365cb54e0741645856edf)
If cogl_pipeline_remove_layer is called on a copied pipeline to remove
a parent layer then it will still end up calling
_cogl_pipeline_remove_layer_difference on the layer. This function
was directly trying to remove the layer from the pipeline's list of
layer differences. However in the child pipeline the layer isn't in
the list because it is unchanged from its parent. The function had an
assertion to verify that this situation wasn't hit so in a debug build
it would just bail out.
This patch removes the assertion and changes it to only remove the
layer if it is owned by the pipeline. Otherwise it just sets the
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS difference as normal and decrements the
number of layers. This will cause it to successfully remove the layer
because either it is the last layer in which case it will be ignored
after n_layers is decreased or if it is in the middle of the list then
the subsequent layers will all be shifted down so there will be a
replacement layer difference.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 88e73dd93fa09a158064a946ab229591a5888b97)
The coding style has for a long time said to avoid using redundant glib
data types such as gint or gchar etc because we feel that they make the
code look unnecessarily foreign to developers coming from outside of the
Gnome developer community.
Note: When we tried to find the historical rationale for the types we
just found that they were apparently only added for consistent syntax
highlighting which didn't seem that compelling.
Up until now we have been continuing to use some of the platform
specific type such as gint{8,16,32,64} and gsize but this patch switches
us over to using the standard c99 equivalents instead so we can further
ensure that our code looks familiar to the widest range of C developers
who might potentially contribute to Cogl.
So instead of using the gint{8,16,32,64} and guint{8,16,32,64} types this
switches all Cogl code to instead use the int{8,16,32,64}_t and
uint{8,16,32,64}_t c99 types instead.
Instead of gsize we now use size_t
For now we are not going to use the c99 _Bool type and instead we have
introduced a new CoglBool type to use instead of gboolean.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 5967dad2400d32ca6319cef6cb572e81bf2c15f0)
Removing CoglHandle has been an on going goal for quite a long time now
and finally this patch removes the last remaining uses of the CoglHandle
type and the cogl_handle_ apis.
Since the big remaining users of CoglHandle were the cogl_program_ and
cogl_shader_ apis which have replaced with the CoglSnippets api this
patch removes both of these apis.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 6ed3aaf4be21d605a1ed3176b3ea825933f85cf0)
Since the original patch was done after removing deprecated API
this back ported patch doesn't affect deprecated API and so
actually this cherry-pick doesn't remove all remaining use of
CoglHandle as it did for the master branch of Cogl.
This adds a _COGL_STATIC_ASSERT macro that can be used for compile time
assertions in C code. If supported by the compiler this macro uses
_Static_assert so that a message can be printed out if the assertion
fails.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 465b39a764f2720e77678cafa56acb0e69007ffd)
GL_ARB_sampler_objects provides a GL object which overrides the
sampler state part of a texture object with different values. The
sampler state that Cogl currently exposes is the wrap modes and
filters. Cogl exposes the state as part of the pipeline layer state
but without this extension GL only exposes it as part of the texture
object state. This means that it won't work to use a single texture
multiple times in one primitive with different sampler states. It also
makes switching between different sampler states with a single texture
not terribly efficient because it has to change the texture object
state every time.
This patch adds a cache for sampler states in a shared hash table
attached to the CoglContext. The entire set of parameters for the
sampler state is used as the key for the hash table. When a unique
state is encountered the sampler cache will create a new entry,
otherwise it will return a const pointer to an existing entry. That
means we can have a single pointer to represent any combination of
sampler state.
Pipeline layers now just store this single pointer rather than storing
all of the sampler state. The two separate state flags for wrap modes
and filters have now been combined into one. It should be faster to
compare the sampler state now because instead of comparing each value
it can just compare the pointers to the cached sampler entries. The
hash table of cached sampler states should only need to perform its
more expensive hash on the state when a property is changed on a
pipeline, not every time it is flushed.
When the sampler objects extension is available each cached sampler
state will also get a sampler object to represent it. The common code
to flush the GL state will now simply bind this object to a unit
instead of flushing the state though the CoglTexture when possible.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
The previous code to initialise the depth state on the default
pipeline wasn't initialising the magic number. If you later tried to
retrieve the depth state using cogl_pipeline_get_depth_state you would
end up with an invalid depth state struct and you would just get
warnings if you tried to use it for anything. This patch just replaces
the initialisation with a call to cogl_depth_state_init because it
uses the same values anyway.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
This option to GCC makes it give a warning whenever a global function
is defined without a declaration. This should catch cases were we've
defined a function but forgot to put it in a header. In that case it
is either only used within one file so we should make it static or we
should declare it in a header.
The following changes where made to fix problems:
• Some functions were made static
• cogl-path.h (the one containing the 1.0 API) was split into two
files, one defining the functions and one defining the enums so that
cogl-path.c can include the enum and function declarations from the
2.0 API as well as the function declarations from the 1.0 API.
• cogl2-clip-state has been removed. This only had one experimental
function called cogl_clip_push_from_path but as this is unstable we
might as well remove it favour of the equivalent cogl_framebuffer_*
API.
• The GLX, SDL and WGL winsys's now have a private header to define
their get_vtable function instead of directly declaring in the C
file where it is called.
• All places that were calling COGL_OBJECT_DEFINE need to have the
cogl_is_whatever function declared so these have been added either
as a public function or in a private header.
• Some files that were not including the header containing their
function declarations have been fixed to do so.
• Any unused error quark functions have been removed. If we later want
them we should add them back one by one and add a declaration for
them in a header.
• _cogl_is_framebuffer has been renamed to cogl_is_framebuffer and
made a public function with a declaration in cogl-framebuffer.h
• Similarly for CoglOnscreen.
• cogl_vdraw_indexed_attributes is called
cogl_framebuffer_vdraw_indexed_attributes in the header. The
definition has been changed to match the header.
• cogl_index_buffer_allocate has been removed. This had no declaration
and I'm not sure what it's supposed to do.
• CoglJournal has been changed to use the internal CoglObject macro so
that it won't define an exported cogl_is_journal symbol.
• The _cogl_blah_pointer_from_handle functions have been removed.
CoglHandle isn't used much anymore anyway and in the few places
where it is used I think it's safe to just use the implicit cast
from void* to the right type.
• The test-utils.h header for the conformance tests explicitly
disables the -Wmissing-declaration option using a pragma because all
of the tests declare their main function without a header. Any
mistakes relating to missing declarations aren't really important
for the tests.
• cogl_quaternion_init_from_quaternion and init_from_matrix have been
given declarations in cogl-quaternion.h
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
As we move towards Cogl 2.0 we are aiming to remove the need for a
default global CoglContext and so everything should be explicitly
related to a context somehow. CoglPipelines are top level objects and
so this patch adds a context argument to cogl_pipeline_new().
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
There were several members of the CoglContext struct using the
CoglHandle type for things that now have replacement typedefs which
this patch fixes.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
This improves the implementation of _cogl_pipeline_equal() to ensure
that the cost of the function scales by the number of bits set in the
pipelines_difference variable set after calling
_cogl_pipeline_compare_differences() instead of scaling by the number of
state groups cogl tracks.
As Cogl tracks more and more state groups we don't want
_cogl_pipeline_equal() to get slower.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
The cogl.h header is meant to be the public header for including the 1.x
api used by Clutter so we should stop using that as a convenient way to
include all likely prototypes and typedefs. Actually we already do a
good job of listing the specific headers we depend on in each of the .c
files we have so mostly this patch just strip out the redundant
includes for cogl.h with a few fixups where that broke the build.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
So we can get to the point where cogl.h is merely an aggregation of
header includes for the 1.x api this moves all the function prototypes
and type definitions into a cogl-context.h and a new cogl1-context.h.
Ideally no code internally should ever need to include cogl.h as it just
represents the public facing header for accessing the 1.x api which
should only be used by Clutter.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
This adds _cogl_pipeline_get_layer_with_flags which takes a set of
flags to modify the behaviour. The only flag currently available is
one to disable creating the layer if the layer index does not already
exist.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
Instead of storing the GLenum for the target of the last used texture
for a layer it now stores the CoglTextureType instead. The state name
has been renamed to 'texture type' instead of 'texture target'.
Previously the default pipeline layer would store 0 here to represent
that there is no texture. This has been changed to store
COGL_TEXTURE_TYPE_2D instead which means that all pipeline layers
always have a valid value for the texture type. Any places that were
previously fetching the texture from a layer to determine the target
(for example when generating shaders or when enabling a particular
texture target) now use the texture type instead. This means they will
work even for layers that don't have a texture.
This also changes it so that when binding a fallback texture instead
of always using a 2D texture it will now use the default texture
corresponding to the texture type of the layer. That way when the
generated shader tries to do a texture lookup for that type of texture
it will get a valid texture object. To make this work the patch adds a
default texture for 3D textures to the context and also makes the
default rectangle texture actually be a rectangle texture instead of
using a 2D texture.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
Previously flushing the matrices was performed as part of the
framebuffer state. When on GLES2 this matrix flushing is actually
diverted so that it only keeps a reference to the intended matrix
stack. This is necessary because on GLES2 there are no builtin
uniforms so it can't actually flush the matrices until the program for
the pipeline is generated. When the matrices are flushed it would
store the age of modifications on the matrix stack so that it could
detect when the matrix hasn't changed and avoid flushing it.
This patch changes it so that the pipeline is responsible for flushing
the matrices even when we are using the GL builtins. The same
mechanism for detecting unmodified matrix stacks is used in all
cases. There is a new CoglMatrixStackCache type which is used to store
a reference to the intended matrix stack along with its last flushed
age. There are now two of these attached to the CoglContext to track
the flushed state for the global matrix builtins and also two for each
glsl progend program state to track the flushed state for a
program. The framebuffer matrix flush now just updates the intended
matrix stacks without actually trying to flush.
When a vertex snippet is attached to the pipeline, the GLSL vertend
will now avoid using the projection matrix to flip the rendering. This
is necessary because any vertex snippet may cause the projection
matrix not to be used. Instead the flip is done as a forced final step
by multiplying cogl_position_out by a vec4 uniform. This uniform is
updated as part of the progend pre_paint depending on whether the
framebuffer is offscreen or not.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
This adds a hook called COGL_SNIPPET_HOOK_TEXTURE_COORD_TRANSFORM.
This can be used to alter the application of the layer user matrix to
a texture coordinate or it can bypass it altogether.
This is the first per-layer hook that affects the vertex shader state
so the patch includes the boilerplate needed to get that to work.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
Whenever snippets are enabled we can't determine whether the final
color will be fully opaque so we just have to assume blending should
be enabled.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
This adds a per-layer snippet hook for the texure lookup. Here the
snippet can modify the texture coordinates used for the lookup or
modify the texel resulting from the lookup. This is the first
per-layer hook so this also adds the
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FRAGMENT_SNIPPETS state and all of the
boilerplate needed to make that work.
Most of the functions used by the pipeline state to manage the snippet
list has been moved into cogl-pipeline-snippet.c so that it can be
shared with the layer state.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
This adds two new public experimental functions for attaching
CoglSnippets to two hook points on a CoglPipeline:
void cogl_pipeline_add_vertex_hook (CoglPipeline *, CoglSnippet *)
void cogl_pipeline_add_fragment_hook (CoglPipeline *, CoglSnippet *)
The hooks are intended to be around the entire vertex or fragment
processing. That means the pre string in the snippet will be inserted
at the very top of the main function and the post function will be
inserted at the very end. The declarations get inserted in the global
scope.
The snippets are stored in two separate linked lists with a structure
containing an enum representing the hook point and a pointer to the
snippet. The lists are meant to be for hooks that affect the vertex
shader and fragment shader respectively. Although there are currently
only two hooks and the names match these two lists, the intention is
*not* that each new hook will be in a separate list. The separation of
the lists is just to make it easier to determine which shader needs to
be regenerated when a new snippet is added.
When a pipeline becomes the authority for either the vertex or
fragment snipper state, it simply copies the entire list from the
previous authority (although of course the shader snippet objects are
referenced instead of copied so it doesn't duplicate the source
strings).
Each string is inserted into its own block in the shader. This means
that each string has its own scope so it doesn't need to worry about
name collisions with variables in other snippets. However it does mean
that the pre and post strings can't share variables. It could be
possible to wrap both parts in one block and then wrap the actual
inner hook code in another block, however this would mean that any
further snippets within the outer snippet would be able to see those
variables. Perhaps something to consider would be to put each snippet
into its own function which calls another function between the pre and
post strings to do further processing.
The pipeline cache for generated programs was previously shared with
the fragment shader cache because the state that affects vertex
shaders was a subset of the state that affects fragment shaders. This
is no longer the case because there is a separate state mask for
vertex snippets so the program cache now has its own hash table.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
_cogl_pipeline_init_multi_property_sparse_state was missing a break in
the case statement handling uniforms. This doesn't yet matter because
it is the last one handled anyway but it will bite someone later.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
The uniform names are now stored in a GPtrArray instead of a linked
list. There is also a hash table to speed up converting names to
locations.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
Previously the uniform overrides were stored in a linked list. Now
they are stored in a g_malloc'd array. The values are still tightly
packed so that there is only a value for each uniform that has a
corresponding bit in override_mask. The allocated size of the array
always exactly corresponds to the number of bits set in the
override_mask. This means that when a new uniform value is set on a
pipeline it will have to grow the array and copy the old values
in. The assumption is that setting a value for a new uniform is much
less frequent then setting a value for an existing uniform so it makes
more sense to optimise the latter.
The advantage of using an array is that we can quickly jump to right
boxed value given a uniform location by doing a population count in
the bitmask for the number of bits less than the given uniform
location. This can be done in O(1) time whereas the old approach using
a list would scale by the number of bits set.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
This adds the following new public experimental functions to set
uniform values on a CoglPipeline:
void
cogl_pipeline_set_uniform_1f (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int uniform_location,
float value);
void
cogl_pipeline_set_uniform_1i (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int uniform_location,
int value);
void
cogl_pipeline_set_uniform_float (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int uniform_location,
int n_components,
int count,
const float *value);
void
cogl_pipeline_set_uniform_int (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int uniform_location,
int n_components,
int count,
const int *value);
void
cogl_pipeline_set_uniform_matrix (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int uniform_location,
int dimensions,
int count,
gboolean transpose,
const float *value);
These are similar to the old functions used to set uniforms on a
CoglProgram. To get a value to pass in as the uniform_location there
is also:
int
cogl_pipeline_get_uniform_location (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
const char *uniform_name);
Conceptually the uniform locations are tied to the pipeline so that
whenever setting a value for a new pipeline the application is
expected to call this function. However in practice the uniform
locations are global to the CoglContext. The names are stored in a
linked list where the position in the list is the uniform location.
The global indices are used so that each pipeline can store a mask of
which uniforms it overrides. That way it is quicker to detect which
uniforms are different from the last pipeline that used the same
CoglProgramState so it can avoid flushing uniforms that haven't
changed. Currently the values are not actually compared which means
that it will only avoid flushing a uniform if there is a common
ancestor that sets the value (or if the same pipeline is being flushed
again - in which case the pipeline and its common ancestor are the
same thing).
The uniform values are stored in the big state of the pipeline as a
sparse linked list. A bitmask stores which values have been overridden
and only overridden values are stored in the linked list.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
This adds two new experimental public functions to replace the old
internal _cogl_pipeline_set_cull_face_state function:
void
cogl_pipeline_set_cull_face_mode (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineCullFaceMode cull_face_mode);
void
cogl_pipeline_set_front_face_winding (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglWinding front_winding);
There are also the corresponding getters.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=663628
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
Since we've had several developers from admirable projects say they
would like to use Cogl but would really prefer not to pull in
gobject,gmodule and glib as extra dependencies we are investigating if
we can get to the point where glib is only an optional dependency.
Actually we feel like we only make minimal use of glib anyway, so it may
well be quite straightforward to achieve this.
This adds a --disable-glib configure option that can be used to disable
features that depend on glib.
Actually --disable-glib doesn't strictly disable glib at this point
because it's more helpful if cogl continues to build as we make
incremental progress towards this.
The first use of glib that this patch tackles is the use of
g_return_val_if_fail and g_return_if_fail which have been replaced with
equivalent _COGL_RETURN_VAL_IF_FAIL and _COGL_RETURN_IF_FAIL macros.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
When freeing a pipeline in _cogl_pipeline_free we weren't making sure to
free the layers_cache which was leading to a memory leak.
Thanks to Sunjin Yang for finding this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=660986
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
This optimizes the layer and pipeline _compare_differences functions so
neither of them use the GArray api since building up the list of
ancestors by appending to a shared GArray was showing quite high on
profiles due to how frequently pipeline comparisons are made. Instead
we now build up a transient, singly linked list by allocating GList
nodes via alloca to build up the parallel lists of ancestors.
This tweaked approach actually ends up being a bit more concise than
before, we avoid the overhead of the GArray api and now avoid making any
function calls while comparing (assuming the _get_parent() calls always
inline), we avoiding needing to get the default cogl context.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
We only need a ctx pointer if we need to refer to the default_layer_x
layers to copy as templates so only call _cogl_context_get_default()
once we need to copy a template. _cogl_context_get_default() was
starting to show up in profiles and this was the main cause.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
This splits out the core CoglPipelineLayer support code from
cogl-pipeline.c into cogl-pipeline-layer.c; it splits out the debugging
code for dumping a pipeline to a .dot file into cogl-pipeline-debug.c
and it splits the CoglPipelineNode support which is shared between
CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer into cogl-node.c.
Note: cogl-pipeline-layer.c only contains the layer code directly
relating to CoglPipelineLayer objects; it does not contain any
_cogl_pipeline API relating to how CoglPipeline tracks and manipulates
layers.
As part of the on going, incremental effort to purge the non type safe
CoglHandle type from the Cogl API this patch tackles most of the
CoglHandle uses relating to textures.
We'd postponed making this change for quite a while because we wanted to
have a clearer understanding of how we wanted to evolve the texture APIs
towards Cogl 2.0 before exposing type safety here which would be
difficult to change later since it would imply breaking APIs.
The basic idea that we are steering towards now is that CoglTexture
can be considered to be the most primitive interface we have for any
object representing a texture. The texture interface would provide
roughly these methods:
cogl_texture_get_width
cogl_texture_get_height
cogl_texture_can_repeat
cogl_texture_can_mipmap
cogl_texture_generate_mipmap;
cogl_texture_get_format
cogl_texture_set_region
cogl_texture_get_region
Besides the texture interface we will then start to expose types
corresponding to specific texture types: CoglTexture2D,
CoglTexture3D, CoglTexture2DSliced, CoglSubTexture, CoglAtlasTexture and
CoglTexturePixmapX11.
We will then also expose an interface for the high-level texture types
we have (such as CoglTexture2DSlice, CoglSubTexture and
CoglAtlasTexture) called CoglMetaTexture. CoglMetaTexture is an
additional interface that lets you iterate a virtual region of a meta
texture and get mappings of primitive textures to sub-regions of that
virtual region. Internally we already have this kind of abstraction for
dealing with sliced texture, sub-textures and atlas textures in a
consistent way, so this will just make that abstraction public. The aim
here is to clarify that there is a difference between primitive textures
(CoglTexture2D/3D) and some of the other high-level textures, and also
enable developers to implement primitives that can support meta textures
since they can only be used with the cogl_rectangle API currently.
The thing that's not so clean-cut with this are the texture constructors
we have currently; such as cogl_texture_new_from_file which no longer
make sense when CoglTexture is considered to be an interface. These
will basically just become convenient factory functions and it's just a
bit unusual that they are within the cogl_texture namespace. It's worth
noting here that all the texture type APIs will also have their own type
specific constructors so these functions will only be used for the
convenience of being able to create a texture without really wanting to
know the details of what type of texture you need. Longer term for 2.0
we may come up with replacement names for these factory functions or the
other thing we are considering is designing some asynchronous factory
functions instead since it's so often detrimental to application
performance to be blocked waiting for a texture to be uploaded to the
GPU.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
This adds an internal function to set the backface culling state on a
pipeline. This includes properties to set the culling mode (front,
back or both) and also to set which face is considered the front
(COGL_WINDING_CLOCKWISE or COGL_WINDING_COUNTER_CLOCKWISE). The actual
front face flushed to GL depends on whether we are rendering to an
offscreen buffer or not. This means that when changing between on- and
off- screen framebuffers it now checks whether the last flushed
pipeline has backface culling enabled and forces a reflush of the cull
face state if so.
The backface culling is now set on a pipeline as part of the legacy
state. This is important because some code in Cogl assumes it can
flush a temporary pipeline to revert to a known state, but previously
this wouldn't disable backface culling so things such as flushing the
clip stack could get confused.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
The ARBfp backend can't handle fog so it tries to check for when it's
enabled and bails out. However it was checking using the global legacy
state value on the CoglContext but this doesn't necessarily reflect
the state that will actually be used by the pipeline because Cogl may
have internally pushed a different pipeline.
This patch adds an internal _cogl_pipeline_get_fog_enabled which the
ARBfp backend now uses.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
As part of an on-going effort to get cogl-pipeline.c into a more
maintainable state this splits out all the apis relating just to
layer state. This just leaves code relating to the core CoglPipeline
and CoglPipelineLayer design left in cogl-pipeline.c.
This splits out around 2k more lines from cogl-pipeline.c although we
are still left with nearly 4k lines so we still have some way to go!
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>